Absorption spectroscopy is a "workhorse" technology widely used in industry and in chemistry, biology, medicine, and other fields of scientific research. Numerous sciences, including chemistry and astronomy, have reached their current state of advancement only though use of absorption spectroscopic instruments.

The roots of absorption spectroscopy can be traced to 1802, when the English chemist William Hyde Wollaston (1766-1828) observed what later became known as the Fraunhofer lines--the many dark lines seen in the spectrum of sunlight. In 1859, the German physicist Gustav Kirchhoff (1824-1887) determined that these lines resulted from absorption...